ishiboo
Well-known member
That's NOT how liens work. I'm going to have to challenge anyone to prove that a Snap-on box financed by truck/credit has an actual lien on it.
Liens MUST be issued by a court of law, unless you're the government, in which case, you can put them on anything your little government heart desires.
Further, property securing a loan typically needs to be titled in some way, or it remains in the lender's possession.
Can anyone post anything from a contract that somehow gives Snap-on (or any other truck brand) some magical rights that nobody else has?
Basically, disprove that this is an unsecured loan from the creditor.
No, a lien on a toolbox is not necessarily filed with a government agency, but there IS a lien on the toolbox. It's developed in the contract itself. There is no power Snap-on has that others do not, it's simple contract law called a PMSI.
As MrMark said, it may be registered in the UCC database, or it may not... but the contract creates the lien.


